Monday, 15 September 2008

SOAS eulogises late Imperialist

On July 23 2008 SOAS (School of Orientali-ist and African Studies) pays homage to deceased academic who helped West steal Iranian oil.

Ann Katherine Swynford Lambton, OBE FBA, first came to SOAS as a student and later as a teacher.

Lambton’s interest in the Arab world was sparked in her teens – according to a friend, when she read T. E. Lawrence’s Revolt in the Desert!!!

She enrolled at SOAS in 1932 after meeting Denison Ross, the orientalist and director of the then still called School of Oriental Studies.

When Ross then persuaded her to concentrate on the Persian world, she registered for an honours degree course in Persian with subsidiary Arabic.

Historian Prof. Ervand Abrahamian in his book Khomeinism: Essays on the Islamic Republic records that:

"The British, determined to undermine Mossadeq from the day he was elected premier, refused to negotiate seriously with him ... Professor Lambton, serving As a Foreign Office consultant, advised as early as November 1951 that the British government should persevere in 'undermining' Mossadeq, refuse to reach agreement with him, and reject American attempts to find a compromise solution. 'The Americans,' she insisted, 'do not have the experience or the psychological insight to understand Persia.'" - Ann Lambton
So, whilst manangement claim that rumours that SOAS was set up as a training ground for miltary and colonial oppressors are false (fascist Enoch Powel did a degree in Urdu on the premise of becoming embassador in India/Palistan), they do not rule out the fact that they taught and trained generations of imperialists/orientalists. Some things never change.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Terry Byers a member of the Communist Party and an economist joined SOAS in the 1960s and retired relatively recently. He and some of his comrades effectively introduced proper Trade Union organisation into the School and also challenged the extremely right wing political establishment of the time. He wrote a pamphlet called 'Oriental Despotism' to describe the treatment of an Indian lecturer being victimised, in a campaign that did eventually change the school for the better.

The present SOAS UCU rep has a few copies I believe. It might be nice to try and get it copied and on-line on this blog, to highlight the other tradition of SOAS. Proving that some things do change and if they go backwards, its worth pushing them fowards again. Knowing Terry a bit, the offer of a bottle of malt whisky would probably do the trick. Say something negative about Peter (censored). That also helps.